Author Archive for Dr Terence Meaden

Another Petition: Let’s make Darwin’s birthday a national holiday

If you go to the web address

http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/Darwins-day/

you can add your name to the petition requesting that 12th February, which is Charles Darwin's birthday, be made into a Bank Holiday.

For some time the government has been seeking an additional bank holiday to give to the public.

The memory of Charles Darwin deserves as much.

Isaac Newton already has a day which atheists celebrate, and that is Isaac's birthday on 25th December. [The man that christians 'celebrate' was not even born on that day, but Isaac Newton really was].

Deadline for signing up is 24 January 2009

Another Petition: Let’s make Darwin’s birthday a national holiday

If you go to the web address

http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/Darwins-day/

you can add your name to the petition requesting that 12th February, which is Charles Darwin's birthday, be made into a Bank Holiday.

For some time the government has been seeking an additional bank holiday to give to the public.

The memory of Charles Darwin deserves as much.

Isaac Newton already has a day which atheists celebrate, and that is Isaac's birthday on 25th December. [The man that christians 'celebrate' was not even born on that day, but Isaac Newton really was].

Deadline for signing up is 24 January 2009

God was "pretty useless" on 9/11 says Archbishop

From the Daily Telegraph of 11.11.2008 (by Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent)

The Archbishop of Canterbury admitted God was 'pretty useless' on 9/11

He admitted this in the face of the 9/11 terror attacks, according to a new book.

"Where the hell was God?", he was asked".

Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, admitted God was 'pretty useless' in the face of 9/11 terror attacks.
Dr Rowan Williams, who was just streets away from the World Trade Center when it was destroyed by Islamic terrorists in hijacked passenger planes, is said to have told an airline pilot in the immediate aftermath of the atrocity that God had not prevented it because He has given humans free will.
The Archbishop and his companions feared they would suffocate in a smoke-filled room as the Twin Towers collapsed, it is claimed, with one of his friends putting a hand on his shoulder and declaring: "I can't think of anyone I'd rather die with."
The dramatic account of Dr Williams' ordeal in New York on September 11, 2001, is included in a new biography, which also discloses that he remains "haunted" by the suicide of a fellow student at Oxford who was besotted with him.
Dr Williams, now the head of the 80 million-strong worldwide Anglican Communion, was the Archbishop of Wales when al-Qa'eda launched its audacious attack on the US mainland, and had been due to address a meeting of religious leaders at an educational foundation just off Wall Street. He and his companions realised they were in a "war zone" after the second tower was struck, according to the book, but Dr Williams is said to have reassured them with a prayer.
As the first skyscraper crumbled, the auditorium filled with soot and smoke and the group feared they were trapped and could die.
The Rev Fred Burnham, director of the Trinity Institute, said the air was "virtually suffocating" and thought to himself: "I don't know how much longer we can tolerate this, maybe we've got 15 minutes, and beginning then to realise I would die."
Elizabeth Koenig, a friend of Dr Williams, is said to have laid a hand on his shoulder and said: "I can't think of anyone I'd rather die with."
Eventually police officers broke down a back door to the building and helped the Archbishop and his group escape, and they stumbled down the streets as the second tower came down, with Dr Williams putting his arm around a colleague.
The following day Dr Williams delivered a sermon at Manhattan's Cathedral of St John the Divine, bringing tears to the eyes of the congregation after recalling a chance encounter he had with an airline pilot on the street early that morning.

According to Rupert Shortt's new biography, the pilot asked him: "Where the hell was God?"

The book states: "Rowan's answer was that God is useless at times like this.
Now that's pretty shocking, but actually what he then went on to unpack is that God didn't cause this and God [was not] going to stop it, because God has granted us free will, and therefore God has to suffer the consequences of this like we do. So in a sense he exonerated God."

Yes the usual weasel words, slimy and slithering, writhing and wriggling.

Seeing that it was deep belief in Allah behind it all, the Christian God was not looking at all omnipotent.

God was "pretty useless" on 9/11 says Archbishop

From the Daily Telegraph of 11.11.2008 (by Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent)

The Archbishop of Canterbury admitted God was 'pretty useless' on 9/11

He admitted this in the face of the 9/11 terror attacks, according to a new book.

"Where the hell was God?", he was asked".

Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, admitted God was 'pretty useless' in the face of 9/11 terror attacks.
Dr Rowan Williams, who was just streets away from the World Trade Center when it was destroyed by Islamic terrorists in hijacked passenger planes, is said to have told an airline pilot in the immediate aftermath of the atrocity that God had not prevented it because He has given humans free will.
The Archbishop and his companions feared they would suffocate in a smoke-filled room as the Twin Towers collapsed, it is claimed, with one of his friends putting a hand on his shoulder and declaring: "I can't think of anyone I'd rather die with."
The dramatic account of Dr Williams' ordeal in New York on September 11, 2001, is included in a new biography, which also discloses that he remains "haunted" by the suicide of a fellow student at Oxford who was besotted with him.
Dr Williams, now the head of the 80 million-strong worldwide Anglican Communion, was the Archbishop of Wales when al-Qa'eda launched its audacious attack on the US mainland, and had been due to address a meeting of religious leaders at an educational foundation just off Wall Street. He and his companions realised they were in a "war zone" after the second tower was struck, according to the book, but Dr Williams is said to have reassured them with a prayer.
As the first skyscraper crumbled, the auditorium filled with soot and smoke and the group feared they were trapped and could die.
The Rev Fred Burnham, director of the Trinity Institute, said the air was "virtually suffocating" and thought to himself: "I don't know how much longer we can tolerate this, maybe we've got 15 minutes, and beginning then to realise I would die."
Elizabeth Koenig, a friend of Dr Williams, is said to have laid a hand on his shoulder and said: "I can't think of anyone I'd rather die with."
Eventually police officers broke down a back door to the building and helped the Archbishop and his group escape, and they stumbled down the streets as the second tower came down, with Dr Williams putting his arm around a colleague.
The following day Dr Williams delivered a sermon at Manhattan's Cathedral of St John the Divine, bringing tears to the eyes of the congregation after recalling a chance encounter he had with an airline pilot on the street early that morning.

According to Rupert Shortt's new biography, the pilot asked him: "Where the hell was God?"

The book states: "Rowan's answer was that God is useless at times like this.
Now that's pretty shocking, but actually what he then went on to unpack is that God didn't cause this and God [was not] going to stop it, because God has granted us free will, and therefore God has to suffer the consequences of this like we do. So in a sense he exonerated God."

Yes the usual weasel words, slimy and slithering, writhing and wriggling.

Seeing that it was deep belief in Allah behind it all, the Christian God was not looking at all omnipotent.

Hapless children watch in troubled silence


"I observed a ritual as part of a death cult that proceeded in a stone building encircled by a zone of buried believers. Solemn worshippers—seemingly unexceptional men and women of all kinds and classes—prostrated themselves before scenes of human torture and made believe they were drinking human blood and eating human flesh while hapless children watched in troubled silence."

This is the reality of the situation, as prompted by Bill Maher's remark cited at the foot of the front page which is “You can't be a rational person six days of the week and put on a suit and make rational decisions and go to work and, on one day of the week, go to a building and think you're drinking the blood of a 2,000-year-old space god. That doesn't make you a person of faith."

Hapless children watch in troubled silence


"I observed a ritual as part of a death cult that proceeded in a stone building encircled by a zone of buried believers. Solemn worshippers—seemingly unexceptional men and women of all kinds and classes—prostrated themselves before scenes of human torture and made believe they were drinking human blood and eating human flesh while hapless children watched in troubled silence."

This is the reality of the situation, as prompted by Bill Maher's remark cited at the foot of the front page which is “You can't be a rational person six days of the week and put on a suit and make rational decisions and go to work and, on one day of the week, go to a building and think you're drinking the blood of a 2,000-year-old space god. That doesn't make you a person of faith."